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Thursday, 24 July 2008

  • Need Help!

    This is an open post to any budding photographers out there who still read my (rarely updated) blog...

    I've been a keen photographer since 1990 and got my first SLR in 1988. There was a 15 month phase when I was at uni where I was shooting on average 3 rolls of film every 2 weeks. For those of you who remember film photography, this was not cheap! :P

    Of course, I've now moved on to a DSLR which is MUCH cheaper than film!

    But I have yet to find a solution to this one big issue...

    What's the best bag?!?!

    So, if you guys have found what you think is the perfect bag, let me know.

    My kit is a body + grip, 4 lenses (1 long zoom with hood reversed, 2 mid-sized zooms, 1 small prime) and various bits and pieces like cables and memory cards and chargers. Also a tripod on occasions.




Wednesday, 18 June 2008

  • Celtics Win It!

    All the so-called experts were tipping the Lakers.

    As for me, I was tipping the Celtics - in 6 (check earlier post).

    And the result?

    The Celtics win title number 17 in 6 games! :)


    Good on them! They deserved to win!




  • Global Slavery Today

    2008 is the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade in America. This is a wonderful thing to celebrate, but what many people fail to realise, myself included until very recently, is that slavery persists today in the modern world at an alarming rate.

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the UN in 1948 states that “slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.” But the numbers prove that these admirable words are only rhetoric.

    Here are some very sobering points:
    1. There are more people in slavery now than at any other time in human history.

    In its 400 years, the transatlantic slave trade is estimated to have shipped up to 12 million Africans to various colonies in the West. 12 million people in 400 years.

    Compare that to today. Conservative estimates have 28 million people in slavery throughout the world this very day.

    2. The value of slaves has decreased.

    A slave in 1850 in the American South cost the equivalent of approximately $40,000 today. The cost of a slave today averages around $90, depending on the work they are forced to carry out.

    A young adult male for menial labour might only fetch $40, whereas an HIV-free female might attract a price of up to $1000.

    Because slaves today are so cheap, people have become disposable and their living conditions are worse than ever before as a result of their value.

    3. Slavery still exists in the Western World

    In America, estimates by the US State Department suggest up to 17,500 slaves are brought into the US every year. The total number most likely exceeds 1,000,000 people in the US today.

    4. To buy all slaves out of slavery could cost as little as $40 per family.

    The $40 figure was provided by the Center for Global Education, New York. To put this into perspective, all slaves in the world today could be bought and freed with one week's cost of the war in Iraq.


    Here is an eye-opening recent article



    Currently Listening
    I Will Go
    By Starfield
    see related

Saturday, 31 May 2008

Friday, 23 May 2008

sol95

  • Visit sol95's Xanga Site
    • Name: Steve
    • Country: Australia
    • Metro: Sydney
    • Birthday: 11/24/1972
    • Gender: Male
    • Member Since: 2/16/2005

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